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The European Union is set to join Pax Silica, a Washington-led initiative to coordinate export controls and co-investment in advanced chips aimed at curbing China’s technological rise, particularly in AI.
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In recent weeks, Brussels has been debating whether to sign up to the initiative, which the US launched last December to secure global supply chains for AI chips, critical minerals and advanced technologies.
The UK, Japan, South Korea, India and Australia have already joined, as have three EU member states — Greece, Finland and Sweden.
The initiative has not been without its critics, however. France has been among the most vocal skeptics, framing it as nothing short of an attempt to colonize Europe and at odds with the EU’s tech sovereignty agenda, which seeks to reduce strategic dependence on foreign suppliers, including American ones.
Still, EU ambassadors are due to green light the initiative on Wednesday. On the same day, Brussels is due to present a package of measures to boost its technological independence, including steps to increase demand for European-made chips and ensure that the most sensitive public-sector cloud applications remain hosted within Europe.
US companies — Nvidia in particular — dominate the design of advanced AI chips underpinning the latest generations of AI systems. Europe, for its part, holds a critical chokepoint in the supply chain through Dutch company ASML, which dominates the production of machinery used to manufacture chips.
The European Commission pushed EU governments to sign up to Pax Silica as a bloc, arguing it would help coordinate with like-minded partners on tech supply chains and create openings for European businesses.
Pressure on Brussels to join collectively mounted in recent weeks, after several EU capitals moved ahead on their own. Under the EU-US trade agreement, the bloc is also set to purchase “at least $40 billion (€37 billion) worth of US AI chips”, according to the joint statement.
Paris and several other capitals sought clarification on the initiative’s governance, its relationship with the G7, and whether it could compromise the EU’s regulatory autonomy, especially on export controls and foreign direct investment screening.
Germany, Italy and the Netherlands, by contrast, were firmly in favor, stressing the need for the EU to present a united front towards Washington.
After consulting with the US State Department, the European Commission confirmed that the Pax Silica Declaration is not legally binding; it is a political statement that will not interfere with EU internal decision-making.
A green light from ambassadors on Wednesday would be the first formal step towards the EU joining Pax Silica. Ministerial endorsement would still be required, and could come as early as next week, Euronews understands.